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Monday, May 29, 2017

Ode to Technology

“Not my world alone,
but your world and my world,
belonging to all the hands who build.”

- Langston Hughes, “Freedom’s Plow”



“That electronic technology
that chains us today
in the prison of
unemployment lines
what could it do
in the hands
of the people”

- Lew Rosenbaum, “Ode to a Cell Phone”


We are sitting in a classroom
writing poems about technology
& our relationship to it…

reaching for words
to describe our lives

            their limitations & possibilities

striving to capture the feeling
of riding a train through underground tunnels
– the sound of it, that low metallic rush –

& people all around, on our phones,
connected through the World Wide Web

millions of invisible waves
travelling through the air,
bringing music to our earbuds,
images & words to our screens,
joining us in a vast global brain
of 7 billion
(miracle of miracles!)
this planetary network
of warp speed connectivity

from which we almost
never
look up

to actually
see  
each other.


We are trying to describe
the strange loneliness of this,
our age…

but also,
                        the comfort of silence,

the kindness of time spent
in transit, locomoting
from one place to another,
with nothing in particular to do,

& the gentle rocking of the train’s motion,
this soothing place
of being alone
(together, yes)
in a quiet kind of intimacy
that I actually enjoy,

here,
writing the poem,
pencil in hand,
scribing in this ancient system
called a book,

stitched by a friend of mine,
with a cover so soft
it eases my soul into a dream
in which my hand begins to fill these pages
with magical lines & dots & circles
that mean things:     

“human”
“history”
  “time”
            “evolution”


(sometimes
i like to think of myself as a kind of tool
for a greater process

not god, necessarily,
– unless you like to think so, as I do –

but you, & us, & everyone,
our species & our mother,
earth)

these hands build
poems, songs, beats, workshops,
concerts, culture,
sandwiches…

they write, they strum, they type
these words
composed by billions of tiny
invisible hands
firing in my brain,

which wonders, now,

what your hands do,
& your brain?

& whatever the answer,
i say

bless the hands!
& bless the brain!

bless the work that is yours,
your contribution…

isn’t this what makes us human?

not the labor,
but the way we share it?
not our stuff,
but the world we create from it
together?

Listen,
people…

Allen was a copy editor for Sun Times, for 23 years,
until he & 600 others got squeezed out by technology…

Lew was a manager at a branch of Barnes & Noble
fired for not wringing the last drop of sweat
out of his workers

Diana was a teacher
slowly shoved out of her classroom
by ready-made materials
from Pearson & Scholastic,
by  “data analysis” & test prep

so much for her hours of conversations
with students in her Beowulf unit
about real-life heroes
like the Freedom Riders
& Water Protectors

now she must look for new ways
to teach & learn.


but,
       Listen –

who, do you think,
is replaceable
in this story
really?

what
is truly
obsolete?

& what if they
– the millions newly deemed disposable –

themselves replaced
the few who have no vision?

Imagine, friends, for just a moment,

the computers taking over the jobs,
& us taking over the computers…

Friends,
to be honest,

I never wanted
to be shackled to a classroom
having spent so many days & years
abhorring them,

but still I’m here
in a different school every day
talking, listening,
trying to master the art of dialogue

because, you see,
this is my most precious tool
&, I think,
our most invincible
weapon

& this is why I’m writing,
speaking to you,

family,

i want to imagine with you, perhaps,
this very place, the same, but different,

i want all of us to visualize
doing the things we most love:

reading, writing,
telling stories,
dancing, strumming a guitar,
painting, gardening,
walking through a forest with the dog,
biking along the lake,
or hiking dew-wet mountain trails,

swimming in the ocean,
studying stars
or history, or Torah,
teaching our youth how to live, how to learn,
how to break dance,
how to make medicinal blends of tea,

or maybe, simply,
sitting quietly with our grandparents,
sipping coffee, making pancakes,
listening to records, or Spotify playlists,
watching movies, playing soccer in the yard
with our nieces & nephews,
with all our relations

(We are all related… )

Relatives,

here is a corner of my imagination,
take it.

stretch with me
as wide as possible:

let’s flex our collective mind
into a portrait of you & me
doing all of these things

freely, meaning,
without any money
& without coercion

simply because we are
what we are –

can you imagine

            a grocery store where nobody has to stand outside
panhandling for food?

a street where no one has to sleep,
or choose between medicine & lights & heat?

& nobody having to stand in the way
of bulldozers coming to turn up the graves
of their great grandmothers & fathers

& no people killed on the street by police
& yes, let’s say it, no police

do we dare picture it?

Comrades,

close your eyes, if you want –
& imagine waking up in bed
knowing every person in the world
has slept warm & safe last night, & every night,
& every morning eating breakfast
with every single one of the 7 billion,
drinking your coffee knowing
that any human hands growing the coffee beans
have worked the land with dignity,
& possess all the time in the world
to rock their own babies to sleep

try to imagine the taste
of food made without the torture of people,
land, animals, or water,

& maybe even
passing a whole day through
from dawn to dusk

without once worrying,
or working a job,

other than what flows
from our own beating hearts

… a never-ending summer vacation…
an eternal Sabbath…


My people,

what would you give
if you could give anything?

if you were free
to receive & to give
all of nature

the way the river feeds its neighbors,
& the forest shelters the owls?

the way the rain waters the prairies,
& children, freely, play…


oh, the days
we’ll spend in the sun,
& the dreams
we’ll dream by night

which we now
cannot


even
dream!!

Monday, April 3, 2017

Out From the Narrow Place

Cain said to his brother Abel, “Let us go out to the field.” And when they were in the field, Cain rose up against his brother and killed him. Then the Lord said to Cain, “Where is your brother Abel?” He said “I do not know; am I my brother’s keeper?”
      Genesis 4:8-9

Chicago police Officer Jason Van Dyke pleaded not guilty Tuesday to murder and misconduct charges in the shooting of 17-year-old Laquan McDonald… Van Dyke's attorney, Daniel Herbert, has said Van Dyke feared for his life and insists that the video doesn't tell the full story.

      CNN, December 2015


This shall be a day of remembrance for you.

In times to come, when your children ask you,
“What is the meaning of these precepts, these statutes, and these laws,
that the Lord our God has laid down for you?”

You shall tell your children,

“Once we were Pharaoh’s slaves in Egypt,
and God brought us out of that narrow place by his mighty hand.

Before our eyes God worked great and terrible signs
and wonders against Pharaoh and all his house.

And he brought us out from there to lead us to the promised land.

And God commanded us to observe all the statutes,
to love God, for our own good forever
so that we might live as on this day.

And for us justice will be to take care
to observe all these commandments
before the Lord our God as he has directed us.”

*

And to love our neighbors as ourselves,

is this not the first and last?

And are we not as bound to struggle
for the freedom of our fellow persecuted as our own?

Remember, now,

at Homan Ave and Fillmore St
in the heart of North Lawndale,
there is a dull brick building
a city block long,
with cameras watching
from the corners of the roof
and a few unmarked cars parked outside,
beneath the fire escapes,
beside the steel garage doors.

If you ask the police officers
standing around what it is, they’ll say,

“I don’t know what this is.”
“This isn’t a police station”
“We don’t hold people here.”


But if you ask Kory Wright,
he might tell you
about the nightmare
he and his relatives lived through
in that building

On the morning of his 20th birthday
a hot day in June,
when he and his cousin were on his porch

He was having his hair braided
while another cousin and a friend
played video games downstairs

A woman walked up to them
and asked for change for a fifty
to buy crack cocaine

Three minutes later,
officers in plain clothes
swarmed the house
arrested the four boys
and took them to the black site

no rights read, no calls made,
no prints taken, no papers filed

Kory told the officers it was his birthday
and they sang Happy Birthday to him

Then
they put the boys in separate cells
the size of cubicles

An officer zip-tied Kory to a bench
strapping his hands on both sides
told him “It’s gonna get a little hot in here”
then left

The temperature rose

For six hours, Kory sat sweating and hurting
with no water or toilet or phone

In another room, his friend Deandre Hutcherson,
19, was cuffed, arms spread as if being crucified
while officers punched him in the face,
stomped on his groin, and interrogated him
about crimes he knew nothing about


When pressed on allegations
of police abuse at Homan Square,
Mayor Rahm Emanuel said,

“That’s not true.
We follow all the rules.”


*


When your children ask you
“What is the purpose of these laws?”

Tell them we were once slaves,
and that is why we know what freedom means.

And that is how our religion came to us:

As a mission
to set the world free –

Tell them
we were once captives
in mitzrayim, the narrow place,
and that the God of Nature brought us out
by parting an ocean and softening a heart

Tell them
we obey these laws
because they come from freedom
and serve that purpose only

and that the darkest, narrowest place of all
is not in Egypt or in Homan Square
but in our very hearts and minds
if we forget the meaning of these words:

Tzedek, Tzedek tir’dof / l’ma’an tich’yeh /
v’yarash’ta et-ha’aretz / asher Adonai eloheycha noten lakh

Justice, Justice shall you pursue, so that you may live
and possess the land the LORD your God is giving you

Put these words upon your hearts.
Teach them to your children.
Talk about them when you sit at home
and when you walk along the road
when you lie down and when you get up

Tattoo them upon your skin
and pin them to your clothes

Tzedek, Tzedek tir’dof
l’ma’an tich’yeh

Write them on protest signs
and frame them over your bed

Tzedek, Tzedek tir’dof
l’ma’an tich’yeh

Justice, and Justice alone shall you follow,

so that you
may live.